Steve Jobs debuts the iPhone in 2007: A year after his death, the innovator continues to be compared to history's greatest innovators and leaders. AP Photo/Paul Sakuma

October 5, 2012

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Steve Jobs, the visionary Apple co-founder who brought personal computers, mp3 players, smartphones, and tablets to the masses, died a year ago today, following a long battle with pancreatic cancer. (Apple is honoring Jobs with a moving memorial video on its homepage.) Equal parts innovator and authoritarian, Jobs had a fierce, unwavering style of leadership and a brilliant imagination that left a seismic imprint well beyond the tech industry, turning a start-up founded in Steve Wozniak's garage into what is now the world's most valuable company. How is Jobs' legacy resonating, now, 365 days after his passing? Here, four great men Jobs is being compared to:

1. Steve Jobs was like Henry FordJust like the automotive innovator, Jobs was "one of those rarefied individuals who had not only a vision" but also the "will and force of personality to execute it through America's greatest cultural triumph: The public corporation," says Mat Honan at Wired. Jobs didn't just disrupt industries; "he fundamentally traumatized them," from computing, to movies, to music, and especially telecommunications. "Even if you find him morally repugnant or prefer his competitors' products, you would have to be a fool to argue against his influence and stature."

2. Steve Jobs was like Thomas EdisonWhen Jobs died, the world "rushed to eulogize him in glowing terms," says Brandon Griggs at CNN. "Genius. Visionary. A modern-day Thomas Edison." And when Jobs is remembered decades from now, it'll be as the man who invented the iPhone and iPad, "not as the executive who was sometimes a tyrant." Truthfully speaking, "does anybody really care whether Alexander Graham Bell was cranky?" Of course not.

3. Steve Jobs was like Ronald ReaganJobs' legacy has taken on a "mythical role for people who write about Apple that's very similar to the way conservative pundits invoke the late President Ronald Reagan," says Rebecca Greenfield at The Atlantic Wire — as a "mythical do-no-wrong hero." Apple's recent flub with Maps caused pundits to falsely lament that such a mishap would've never happened on Jobs' watch, much the same way some pundits say Reagan would have never embraced the Tea Party or dissed the 47 percent.

4. Steve Jobs was like Walt DisneyDisney was "the closest thing corporate America had to a Steve Jobs-like figure before Steve Jobs came along," says Harry McCracken at TIME. Like Jobs, the Mickey Mouse creator had the foresight to leave a "deeply competent team" in his stead, and the studio continues to release movies very much like the ones it had been making when Disney passed away in 1966. In Apple's case, that team includes the best of the best: CEO Tim Cook, "design god" Jonathan Ive, and marketing honcho Phil Schiller. All of them "understand how to make great products."